Relive an eventful moving day at the PGA Championship as it happened at Quail Hollow, where Kevin Kisner grabbed the lead.

That brings an end to our live coverage from what has been an eventful moving day at the PGA Championship. We didn't see anyone break away and pull clear of the rest of the field, with Kevin Kisner taking a one-shot lead in to the final round.

Who will win the final major of the year? Join us tomorrow to find out...

Day elects to putt from a long way off the green at the last, still rattled by his series of errors. His 10-footer to stay under par for the tournament lips-out of the edge, with the Australian rushing home the following effort for a quadruple-bogey eight.

Those who backed Day to impress this week have just seen their hopes all-but ended in the past 15 minutes. A six-over 77 leaves him seven off the pace.

The former world No 1 has to take a penalty drop and is currently in discussion with a rules official as to where he can get relief from, with little room between the bushes and the stand.

The delay and bizarre nature of it all strikes similarities to Spieth's moment of madness from the 13th at The Open. He manages to get it over the bushes and finds the rough.

With four shots already taken, the 2015 champion's next skips along the fairway and is still short of the green. That gamble from the trees is rapdily turning in to a tournament-ending decision. Carnage.

Most would've expected Day to pitch back on to the fairway from a horror lie in the fairway, but the Australian has other ideas. He tries to hook it around the tree but has a shocker and smashes it off the tree in to the bushes. Horrendous decision.

Chris Stroud follows his bogey at the 17th with another as he three putts the 18th. Kevin Kisner leads by two shots once again. Stroud's late slip leaves him with a 71 and he is six under after 54 holes.

Louis Oosthuizen is just one shot further back after he finishes with a par for another 71. Francesco Molinari, the third member of the group, cards a 74 to drop back to two under.

Kevin Kisner repeats Chris Stroud's trick from a few minutes ago as his birdie putt on the 17th hits the cup and pops out to the right. A par three leaves him one clear.

Jason Day's birdie run ends disappointingly with a bogey at the same hole to slip back to four under. Hideki Matsuyama makes a fourth straight par thanks to a fine up-and-down from a greenside bunker. He remains six under.

Kevin Kisner pulls his second shot into the water alongside the green at the 16th. The tournament leader then leaves his fourth shot well short of the flag and fails to hole his putt as it rattles into and then out of the hole. He is now back to eight under and level with Stroud.

Jason Day, meanwhile, drains a 40-foot birdie putt to move up to five under - his third birdie on the trot - as Hideki Matsuyama settles for a par.

Kevin Kisner is now Sky Bet's 11/8 favourite to win his first major while Hideki Matsuyama is next in the running at 11/4 as he too chases his maiden crown. The other main contenders are Chris Stroud (13/2), Justin Thomas (9/1), Jason Day (14/1), Louis Oosthuizen (22/1) and Rickie Fowler (28/1).

Sky Bet's in-play Price Boost is Fowler or Justin Thomas to win at 15/2 from 13/2.

Rickie Fowler finds the water as he leaves his tee shot short at the par-three 17th. He finds the green at the second attempt and almost holes the putt but is left with a double bogey which drops him back to two under.

Kevin Kisner puts everything in to his second shot, smashing his three-wood off the deck and on to the green. Matsuyama, from 20 yards further along the fairway, doesn't have the legs to reach the green.

Day, from a perfect spot on the landing strip, attacks the flag and leaves himself less than 15 feet from the flag.

"Finally" is the reaction from Day at the 15th as he finally finds a fairway off the tee, his first since the fifth hole. Kevin Kisner is also on the landing strip, with Matsuyama also finding the fairway.

Further along the hole, Justin Thomas birdies the par-five to join playing partner Rickie Fowler in the group four off the pace.

Matsuyama pitches out of the sand and sees his ball check on the heart of the green. Day has to remove his shoe and step in to the water to have any kind of stance, but hits a corker of a recovery to give himself a birdie look.

Chris Stroud slots in from eight feet at the 14th to join Kisner in a share of the advantage at eight under.

At the same hole, Kisner's tee shot trickles on to the front edge of the green on the driveable par-four. Matsuyama goes left and in to the greenside bunker. Day, with a driving iron, goes left again but clings on to the bank just shy of the water.

Kisner takes dead-aim at the 13th flag off the tee and sees it hop past the cup and run 15 feet past. Matusyama appears to be on the putting surface but sees his ball catch the ridge and run a long way off the green.

Day, three over for his past four holes, also misses the green and has a tough lie after another tee shot strays left.

Matsuyama undercooks his chip from the rough, with the world No 2 failing to make it on to the green. His second clips the dancefloor and rolls four feet past the flag, seeing him drop a shot.

Kisner's putt from 10 feet has the perfect line but stops a roll short of the cup, meaning he also makes a five. Day slides down the leaderboard with a double-bogey, but is still only within five of the lead.

DeLaet is making a mockery of the back-nine challenges, with an eagle-three at the 15th his second in as many holes and lifting him back in to red figures. He has played the last three holes in five under!

Fowler, due a birdie, confidently rattles in from 12 feet at the 12th to get within four of the leaders.

Matsuyama's bump and run from way right of the 10th green clings on to the dancefloor, but the world No 2 is still 20 feet from the pin. He pulls his birdie try as it slows up a foot short, leaving him tapping in for par.

Kisner's long birdie effort from the fringe brushes the edge but means he settles for a five. Day misses another one from close range, seeing his ball roll 360 degrees around the rim but not dropping in.